I dont no exact ans but am thinking this is the ans for that , we can take the o/p for the ce amplifier in two ways one across the collector resistor and other one ofter the coupling capacuitor with respect to the ground.
A microphone is designed to output a signal.It's not designed to output music.
If the input resistor (Ri) of an inverting amplifier is open, the amplifier would not receive any input voltage. Consequently, the output would be undefined or could potentially swing to the positive or negative supply voltage, depending on any stray voltages or noise present in the circuit. Essentially, the amplifier would not function as intended, as it relies on a defined input signal to produce an output.
It is probably the output amplifier chip.
To connect your guitar to an amplifier using a guitar cord, plug one end of the cord into the output jack on your guitar and the other end into the input jack on the amplifier. Make sure both the guitar and amplifier are turned off before connecting to avoid any unwanted noise. Adjust the volume and tone settings on both the guitar and amplifier to achieve the desired sound.
Quite simply, it's an amplifier wherein the stages as set up so that the output of one stage is coupled directly into the input of the next stage without any wave shaping or tuninig components between them. This makes for fairly flat frequency response. A link is provided to the Wikipedia article on direct coupling.
Most power amplifiers will handle a load of 6 ohms. The spec you need to look at is the power handling of the speakers. If they are rated for 100 watts program power, then look for an amplifier rated for 100 watts RMS output. Any amplifier can be connected with adapter cables to the typical 1/8" output of your computer.
A: No speakers are not at risk. what it maybe a risk is the amplifier if it try to drive 180 watts load. but as long as you keep the level at 10 watts output it should work fine
I think the answer you are looking for is MICROPHONE JACK PLUG, meaning the plug/connection that fits into an amplifier or any output socket from the microphone itself. Hope this helps
Yes, an 8 Ohm speaker can work with a 16 Ohm amplifier, but it is not the ideal match. When connecting a lower impedance speaker (8 Ohm) to a higher impedance amplifier (16 Ohm), the amplifier will output more power than the speaker is rated for. This can potentially damage the speaker due to the higher current flowing through it. It is recommended to match the impedance ratings of the speaker and amplifier for optimal performance and to prevent any potential damage.
Yes, and it is simple. You must bring a USB player. You can power this USB player with 5V supply. Fit that USB player case where you want. There will be two channel output for the USB player. Take any 1 output with ground and connect to the auxillary input of the CPA-560 amplifier.
A: Follow this the amplifier has infinite gain. So any input will slew it to either power supply buss as saturated. Now take this saturated signal and feed it back to the input since the feedback is negative in nature to the input it will force the output to reverts to the other buss voltage. But the since negative feedback is a proportion of the output signal it will reach a point where it is stabilized and linear. That is the intention of negative feedback feed back some output signal to stabilize to a happy stability or linear with reduced feedback of course
To hook up an amplifier to your amp, first make sure both devices are powered off. Connect the output of your amp to the input of the amplifier using appropriate cables, typically RCA or 1/4" TRS cables. Ensure that the amplifier is set to the correct input source, and then power both devices on. Adjust the volume levels gradually to avoid any sudden loud sounds.